I bet a bunch of you that watched the draft remember this guy. He's the guy from the Army Academy that was drafted by the Lions and allowed to pursue his NFL career. One day before training camp, the Army pulled the rug out from under him and told him he had to report to active duty. Caleb Campbell even checked on this one week ago to make sure everything was good to go.

In my opinion, this is a bad move by the Army. Had you told him from day 1 that he has to serve -- I'm fine with that. But certainly don't wait till a day before training camp. That's just mean.

There is always a way out, but he seems to be a bigger man than that. I am suprised that the Army did not "grandfather clause" him into the old regulation. Oh well, hopefully he stays alive and gets another shot in 2 years.

Daseal

07-24-2008 09:41 AM

Re: Caleb Campbell -- No longer allowed to play.

Its not very fair to the Lions either. They blow a draft pick on a guy they've been told can play if he makes the team, then that gets stripped away.

KLHJ2

07-24-2008 09:49 AM

Re: Caleb Campbell -- No longer allowed to play.

[quote=Daseal;458905]Its not very fair to the Lions either. They blow a draft pick on a guy they've been told can play if he makes the team, then that gets stripped away.[/quote]

Possible compensatory next year? More than likely not. Did we get anying to compensate us for Sean? Will we? Similar situation where a team loses a player to non football related circumstances. Maybe this should be discussed by the league to compensate teams for these type of losses as well.

Ade Jimoh Fan Club

07-24-2008 10:18 AM

Re: Caleb Campbell -- No longer allowed to play.

This is a rediculous, asinine move by the Army. When he was drafted, there was a standing ovation and great stories reported on ESPN and other outlets. The potential positive PR from this is way, way, way more beneficial to the Army then sticking another 2LT in Iraq.

I think the policy was flawed in that it had to be opened to all athletes; hence, if a player made the professional badmitton tour then they could use the clause to get out of their active duty committment.

It was a good idea, because it allows athletes that are highly rated to consider the military academy as an option. As it stands now, anyone with even a long, longshot at the NFL would not consider the academy. Plus, the way the policy was stated, Campbell wasn't just getting out scott-free, he had to do recruiting details for several years, which could have had a great benefit to the Army. Imagine an NFL safety coming to your high school and pumping up the Army - great recruiting tool.

I think the way to fix the loophole would be to mandate that anyone that uses the "clause" to get out early for athletic reasons has to pay back the value of their education (valued at around $250K). This will keep it so that only the NFL/NBA/MLB types can afford to do so (and it will be very, very rare at that). The fact that they retro-actively screwed Campbell (and the Lions) is absolutely rediculous and pisses me off to no end. It's simply a case of the Army reacting to public outcry by a bunch of idiots who don't have a clue. It's what the Army does best...

sandtrapjack

07-24-2008 10:29 AM

Re: Caleb Campbell -- No longer allowed to play.

Sorry to play devils advocate. But you have to look at it from another perspective to understand this one.

Campbell went to college on the tax payers dime. The scholarships he was awarded paid for everything in college from housing to meals to tuition and books. And he also got a paycheck every month while in the program.

These scholarship programs can easily exceed 165,000 dollars. Campbell agreed to this WAY before the Lions came calling. I agree that Campbell is handling this with a lot of class.

But look at it this way, what if your congressmen misused government funds to the tune of 165,000? Would you want him to get a free ride?

The Army is simply protecting the investment made by you and me (the taxpayer).

GhettoDogAllStars

07-24-2008 11:25 AM

Re: Caleb Campbell -- No longer allowed to play.

[QUOTE=sandtrapjack;458915]Sorry to play devils advocate. But you have to look at it from another perspective to understand this one.

Campbell went to college on the tax payers dime. The scholarships he was awarded paid for everything in college from housing to meals to tuition and books. And he also got a paycheck every month while in the program.

These scholarship programs can easily exceed 165,000 dollars. Campbell agreed to this WAY before the Lions came calling. I agree that Campbell is handling this with a lot of class.

But look at it this way, what if your congressmen misused government funds to the tune of 165,000? Would you want him to get a free ride?

The Army is simply protecting the investment made by you and me (the taxpayer).[/QUOTE]

From what I understand, Congressmen get paid about $165,000 per year. So, I would say our Congressmen misuse that kind of money every year, and they always get a free ride.

But, I like AJFC's idea: make them pay back the cost.

Ade Jimoh Fan Club

07-24-2008 11:37 AM

Re: Caleb Campbell -- No longer allowed to play.

[QUOTE=sandtrapjack;458915]Sorry to play devils advocate. But you have to look at it from another perspective to understand this one.

Campbell went to college on the tax payers dime. The scholarships he was awarded paid for everything in college from housing to meals to tuition and books. And he also got a paycheck every month while in the program.

These scholarship programs can easily exceed 165,000 dollars. Campbell agreed to this WAY before the Lions came calling. I agree that Campbell is handling this with a lot of class.

But look at it this way, what if your congressmen misused government funds to the tune of 165,000? Would you want him to get a free ride?

The Army is simply protecting the investment made by you and me (the taxpayer).[/QUOTE]

As it previously read, the "out clause" still required Campbell to serve in the reserves and perform recruiting duties - so he's not "stealing" $165K as you alleged. IMO, an NFL player performing recruiting duties is VERY VALUABLE to the Army and the PR associated with it easily outweighs the money invested in him. $165K is like a 30 second commercial on TV. IMO, it's all about understanding the bigger picture for the Army.

Schneed10

07-24-2008 11:50 AM

Re: Caleb Campbell -- No longer allowed to play.

Some things supercede football, gentlemen. Our armed forces need all the help they can get. The timing is unfortunate for Caleb and the Lions, but I'm not exactly crying for the Lions losing a pick in the draft when Campbell will be heading to active duty with an opportunity to contribute to our cause and possibly save the lives of his fellow soldiers at some point.

Some things are just more important than football.

saden1

07-24-2008 01:17 PM

Re: Caleb Campbell -- No longer allowed to play.

Army need bodies and he signed up to serve. Still, it kinda sucks that they used him and didn't tell him from the get go he's not going to play pro ball.

Ade Jimoh Fan Club

07-24-2008 01:29 PM

Re: Caleb Campbell -- No longer allowed to play.

[QUOTE=Schneed10;458932]Some things supercede football, gentlemen. Our armed forces need all the help they can get. The timing is unfortunate for Caleb and the Lions, but I'm not exactly crying for the Lions losing a pick in the draft when Campbell will be heading to active duty with an opportunity to contribute to our cause and possibly save the lives of his fellow soldiers at some point.

Some things are just more important than football.[/QUOTE]

Recruiting is a legitimate need of the Army and he would be serving in that capacity. In the end, that is a better way for him to serve the Army than another warm body in Iraq.

Plus, do you think he's going to be in Iraq next month? No, he's going to spend the better part of next year as a graduate assistant helping out the football team (this is not speculation, but fact), the next 6 months after than in Officer Basic Training and then maybe a few months after than in active duty. Not exactly a better use of his potential if you ask me.

Daseal

07-24-2008 02:13 PM

Re: Caleb Campbell -- No longer allowed to play.

The thing about the other armed services is their respective academies don't have the same policy about athletes. If you want him to serve, fine. I have no issue with that, but don't tell the poor kid he can play football professionally and then yank him a way a day before training camp.

KLHJ2

07-24-2008 02:16 PM

Re: Caleb Campbell -- No longer allowed to play.

[quote=Ade Jimoh Fan Club;458973]Recruiting is a legitimate need of the Army and he would be serving in that capacity. In the end, that is a better way for him to serve the Army than another warm body in Iraq.

Plus, do you think he's going to be in Iraq next month? No, he's going to spend the better part of next year as a graduate assistant helping out the football team (this is not speculation, but fact), the next 6 months after than in Officer Basic Training and then maybe a few months after than in active duty. Not exactly a better use of his potential if you ask me.[/quote]

OBC is now BOLC which is done in phases, as opposed to the old system. The majority of BOLC is completed while they are still in school. All that is left when they graduate is BOLC III. It is usually not that long. With the new system they can push LT's to their units faster. He might be in Iraq faster than you suggest. I cannot contest the "graduate assistant" thing that you spoke of (though I have never heard of it). On the other hand I was an OBC and a BOLC Instructor.

irish

07-24-2008 02:19 PM

Re: Caleb Campbell -- No longer allowed to play.

With the way the Pentagon has been jerking around the troops and changing the terms of committment under the current administration its no surprise they'd jerk this kid around too.